The Hard Verge: Britain 2025

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When a Syrian journalist disappears in London after an ultra right party has been voted into office, her British partner seeks to find her. In the surveillance state Britain has become, Jennifer must be careful who she asks for help. Her search leads her into the immigrant community and to four renegade Members of Parliament whose investigation uncovers secrets about Britain’s privatized asylum camps, missing children, the government’s Poton Downs research facility, and the Saudi government’s involvement. What options do asylum seekers and their allies have in this new U.K.?


Prologue I lost myself in unexpected grief the night I met Jennifer. We both had enrolled in a community education course on the History of the Middle East. The professor was a young Brit with a closely trimmed beard and intense eyes peering through his dark framed glasses. He knew a lot about his subject. That night he lectured on Syria. I did not notice the young British woman sitting beside me. My attention was focused on the speaker. I wanted to learn what this foreign expert knew about my country. I didn’t wear the hijab at that time. I was trying to blend into my adopted country, grateful for refuge. I was all right until the screen filled with images of Homs, streets obliterated, people scattered like rag dolls among the rubble, startling puddles of crimson against the gray haze of smoke that hung in the air where the bombs had landed. The photographs triggered images preserved forever on my retina. I did not know where I was or what was real. I began to tremble. I could barely restrain a howl birthed in my cavern of horror. I must disguise my panic. I pulled myself to standing and, choking my urge to run, forced myself to walk out of the classroom. I was unaware that the woman seated beside me had followed me. In the women’s toilet I sat in the farthest stall, huddled into myself and breathing rapidly, unable to stop the images scrolling behind my eyelids. After many minutes, I heard a female voice speaking softly. “Do you want to talk about it? It’s okay either way.” I remained silent for a long time, trying to breathe normally, stifling the gasps that like tics took over my body. I assumed the stranger had left. When I recovered enough to leave the stall, I saw her leaning against the window sill. She wasn’t even checking her phone. She didn’t speak, just waited. I moved to the sink and splashed my face with water, avoiding her. “No one should go through such a scary place alone. Want to go for a coffee? she said.” I didn’t want to go, yet I found myself, silent and robotic, shuffling after her. In the next hour while we sat in the darkest corner of the cafeteria, I cried the tears I had suppressed for a decade. She followed me into my Pit and listened closely to my story . She helped me bear my memories. Later she encouraged me to reach for other memories that I thought the war had obliterated, memories of when we laughed and joked, ate special foods for Bairam,


sang traditional songs, and walked the countryside picking pomegranates and figs. After several months I moved into her home with my younger brothers and for the last three years flourished under her care. When my night terrors came and I heard again the whoosh of the bombs and the frantic cries of parents seeking their little ones under the rubble, Jennifer would turn on a light, wake me up and listen, one hand resting softly on mine. When my flood of words subsided, she would hold me. Then she would fetch me a glass of pomegranate juice. I’ve never known where she found pomegranate juice. Once I told her I did not want her to stay with me out of pity. “I am like a blind and lame cat that stumbled into your space and you had to take me in.” Her eyes ran like fountains at my words. “Can’t you see how deeply I love you, Ana?” she said. “You are the most interesting, intelligent, beautiful person I have ever known. What you have gone through has strengthened and deepened you. I am so lucky to know you, to love you. So lucky.” One day she found a street market that sold fresh figs and bought all the shopkeeper had. That night the four of us devoured them, our mouths dripping with their sweetness. We were giddy, gorging on the happy memories carried in the taste of those figs. Even Mohammed was laughing. Jennifer jokes that I rescued her from a bland British life, that I turned her from a scientist who dabbled in social work to an advocate for the rights of those the Ultra Party terms “enemies of Britain.” She supports the work I do with refugees and asylum seekers, and she will support it even now, I know. Even if it means we may never be together again.


Chapter 1 She was late leaving work, late catching the Tube, and rain spilled from the sky into the streets. Not a steady London drizzle, this. More like an avalanche of water surging at you from all sides. She could feel her feet sloshing in her shoes. The light over the door was out and she couldn’t find the damn key. She stood on the step balancing the umbrella and a bag of dampening bread she’d bought at the corner market, while one wet hand felt in her bag felt for the house key. Her fogged glasses complicated inserting the key but, finally, she turned it, pushed against the swollen door and stumbled over the threshold. The smell of something burning assaulted her nostrils and seized up her throat. The kitchen was straight ahead, barely visible through the gray haze that drifted toward the open door. Black smoke rose from a pot on the stove wafting up and out into the hallway. Coughing, she moved quickly into the kitchen and felt for the knob that would turn off the burner. It was scorching hot and her hand jumped from it. Using the front of her jacket as a potholder she grabbed the handle and lifted the offending pot, swiveling her body to move it into the sink. Smoke burned down into her lungs and her eyes watered so that she could barely locate the sink. As the heat penetrated through her jacket to her hand, the pain from her seared palm registered in her brain, and she dropped the pan. With a giant crack like a gunshot the bottom of the pot separated from its body as it hit the sink. She reached for the tap and turned on the cold water. Billows of steam surged upward through the dark smoke as she pushed her throbbing hand under the tap for several minutes. Then, wrapping a dish towel around her hand, she staggered toward the doorway to the dining room. The dining room, too, was clotted with smoke. She croaked, “Ana!” but the final syllable stuck as it tried to leave her throat. There was no answer. She moved toward the desk next to the front door where they kept the landline. She was surprised to find it resting on the desk with its green engaged light blinking and a mechanical female voice repeating, “Please hang up and try your call again.” She wondered how long the voice had been making that request. Panic cramped her stomach. Where was Ana? She pulled herself up the stairs, holding gingerly onto the bannister with her turbaned burned hand, her other hand pushing against the wall for support. It was even smokier upstairs. The smell hung on the draperies and bedclothes, ominous and insistent.


Their room looked as she had left it, bed made with Ana’s usual precision, clothes picked up from the chair where she had tossed them when she’d hurried off to work knowing she was late. The belt to her fleece robe trailed from under the closet door crimson and wiggly like a stream of blood. It was unlike Ana not to tuck it away. Ana would have taken time to arrange it properly over the hook in the closet, clucking to herself that she shouldn’t have to pick up other people’s droppings. The other two bedrooms were equally pristine except for the smoke hanging like a shroud over the beds. But the red belt snaking from under the closet door and the burning pot left no doubt that something was wrong. She checked the bathroom feeling a familiar rush of terror left over from her childhood. When she was a kid and the first one home to an empty house, she had felt that terror daily as she checked each room while saving the most frightening of all, the bathroom, for last. Now as then she marshalled her courage, pushed open the bathroom door and, with fear rising like bile, threw back the shower curtain. Now, as then, no monster lurked in wait for her. Where was Ana? The silence overpowered her and she sank onto the toilet seat. She closed the bathroom door and opened the window to let out the smoke. The pain in her palm demanded attention. She filled the sink with cold water, unwrapped her hand and rested her arm on the edge of the sink, hand dangling down into the water. Relief reached her brain and for a moment she forgot her fear. With her left hand she opened the medicine cabinet, her hand remembering the tube of zinc oxide and the box of gauze pads on the second shelf. The zinc oxide fell heavily into the sink splashing water onto her trousers. When she reached for it, she felt the packet of 4 x 4 gauze pads in their waxed paper sleeve settle softly on the back of her hand, then float as listless as something dead on top of the water. She tore open the gauze and, using her teeth, unscrewed the cap on the zinc oxide. She dried her pulsing palm with the hand towel that hung next to the sink. She applied the dressing. Better. She stood to look for tape, found it, and wrapped it around her painful palm, constructing a rather sloppy bandage. She opened the windows in the bedrooms and flipped the switch that turned on the attic fan that made a great clattering noise as though a regiment of armed men were rushing the enemy. She returned to their room as the smoke dissipated, looking for signs of Ana’s having been there. Nothing appeared out of place. Nothing was missing. Except Ana.


She descended the stairs and removed her keys from the front door. She locked the inner door and kept the wooden door open to air the house. That’s when she noticed Ana’s handbag sitting upright on the chair beside the front door, where she always positioned it so she wouldn’t have to hunt for it when something came up that required her to leave this sanctuary in a hurry. Jennifer found it hard to swallow. Ana’s handbag, intact! Wallet, money, credit cards, lip gloss, breath mints, a packet of tissues—only her mobile phone was missing. The mail pooled just inside the threshold bore a smeared shoeprint. Jennifer must have walked right over the mail as she charged into the house. She scanned it now as though it might tell her where this woman, her dearest companion and the love of her life, might have gone. Only ads from the local COOP and a catalog featuring women in fashionable headscarves looked back at her. Nothing more. They had met in grad school three years ago in a class on the history of the Middle East. Ana had come from Syria in 2014 and was living with her two younger brothers in a tiny apartment in a complex that catered to internationals. In those days she wore trousers and loose shirts that covered her arms and legs, but no head scarf. Her dress was a kind of compromise between her inclination to declare herself as Muslim while not offending the Islamophobic people with whom her life intersected every day. Her brothers, on the other hand, with their casual drinking, jeans and T-shirts, appeared entirely Westernized. They dated British girls whose uncovered arms and legs and half visible breasts cradled in push-up bras left Ana feeling embarrassed for them, she had told Jennifer. As months passed, Ana had responded to growing anti-Muslim sentiment in Britain with nonverbal defiance. When the local media complained about women they called “jihadists” being a danger to the country—“who knows what they may be hiding beneath their loose clothing!”—when they warned the public that women wearing burqas or face coverings might well be terrorists and editorialized that they should be body searched at the airport and subway, Ana began to cover her hair with a headscarf. She said she wanted to show solidarity. “We came here because of freedom of expression. Stereotyping Muslim women who exercise that freedom by covering their hair is blatant hypocrisy.” She said that at dinner the night she first began to wear hijab. That was a year ago. Shortly after that, they’d moved in together, Ana and her brothers sharing this house that Jennifer had bought after a major promotion made it


possible to manage a mortgage. Some months later Jennifer and Ana began sharing the bedroom with the king-sized bed. This triggered Ana’s older brother Mohammed who, outraged and dismissive, erupted that evening and called his sister the worst names he could think of because she shared a bed with a woman. The next day both brothers moved out. There had been no contact with them since. Jennifer hated to see Ana’s family split, hated being the cause. Being a transplanted Muslim in Britain was hard enough without losing what was left of your family. This family had fled the horrors of war and lost both parents as well. It was common knowledge that since the Ultra Right won the election two years ago the UK government was tapping their phones, tracking their movements, monitoring their email. Not only Muslim women wearing burqas or headscarves, or those with Muslim names, were on the watch list now. Sympathetic Brits, taunted as “wannabe ragheads,” were also under surveillance, according to reports in the Guardian. Rumor had it that even changing your name wouldn’t protect you. Those who were open about their religion were under special government scrutiny. Ana was a free lance journalist working with Human Rights Watch and Amnesty on the plight of Muslim asylum seekers. Once her brothers moved out, she had begun using the bedroom her brothers had vacated as her office. She said she felt safer working from home. She could research and write her articles for online media covering the war in Syria and, when she needed to interview people, meet them after dark. Anonymity was important and darkness supplied the illusion of anonymity. Could it be that Ana had rushed off to help another asylum seeker taken into custody by the police? But it was totally unlike her to leave without taping a sticky note to the refrigerator that said where she was and when she’d be back. She would never leave with a pot cooking on the stove, the landline off the hook, and her handbag sitting by the front door. Jennifer hurried downstairs to check the shiny surface of the fridge in case she’d missed a note. Spotless and empty. It reflected only her worried face. Ana was intolerant of clutter. She said when you are a refugee, you learn to minimize. You never know when you will have to move at a moment’s notice. Surely she wouldn’t move without telling me? Jennifer wondered if she should call her parents. She and Ana assumed her parents’ phones, too, were tapped. Her parents were good people, optimistic and progressive, part of Britain’s dwindling middle class here in the capital city. She needed their


optimism, their confidence in the government, a confidence she was raised with. She needed their common sense and their reassurance that everything would be all right. “Mum.” She tried to keep her voice even. She and Ana had made a game of it, this effort to make those listening in work for anything they got. “Could you drop by tonight?” She heard her mother’s reluctant sigh. Mum was so transparent. Probably she was already in her pajamas nestled beside Dad watching the evening news. “I have to get dressed, but I’ll be there in twenty-five minutes, honey,” Mum replied. Jennifer could count on Mum to come through for her. The smoke had mostly dissipated with the ceiling fans and open doors and windows. Jennifer placed the remains of the fractured pan in the trash and heated water for a pot of cinnamon tea, Mum’s favorite. Realizing that it had been nine hours since she’d eaten, she nosed about in the fridge and located a jar of Ana’s homemade yogurt, some pita, and Ana’s hummus that tasted of cumin and garlic. By the time Mum arrived, she was sated and her problem-solving mode had kicked in. They sat together at the kitchen table with the radio playing slow jazz to obscure their voices and entertain those listening in. “Honey, she must have been called away to an interview she couldn’t pass up. I’m sure she’ll be home soon.” Although she needed Mum’s reassurance, Jennifer knew better. “Could she have gone to see her brothers? Maybe she got word that they were in some kind of trouble and just flew out the door to help them. You know that’s how she’d respond. She’s missed them so much….Maybe I should stay the night with you. Would that help?” She so loved her Mum’s eagerness to be helpful, but Mum’s optimism wasn’t helping tonight and eventually Mum went home to her own house. It was one a.m. when Jennifer went to bed, leaving the porch and hall lights on for Ana, just in case. The streetlights shone through the bedroom window glaring and intense as an interrogation lamp. She’d forgotten to draw the curtains, or maybe she’d been afraid to. Her fear pulled her to Ana’s side of the bed and she nuzzled Ana’s pillow seeking the slight scent of Jasmine Ana’s graceful neck had left behind. It was a long night. She woke to the sun ambling hopefully across the quilt and alighting on her face.



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